1st Edition

Media Globalization and Digital Journalism in Malaysia Network Newswork

By Amira Firdaus Copyright 2018
    206 Pages
    by Routledge

    206 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    The media ecology within which conventional mainstream journalism currently operates has undergone major transformations since the advent of social media. These transformations arise from the disruption brought upon by the emergence of networked, interactive platforms and user-driven online applications including social media, blogs and alternative citizen news sites.



    This book analyses networked forms of journalistic production at traditional news organizations and their conventional news channels. Focusing on case studies from Malaysia, it examines current transformations to the norms, practices and values of conventional news production. Drawing upon a recent global-comparative turn in journalism studies and parallel efforts to de-Westernize communication theory, this book suggests an innovative ‘glocal’ comparative approach to analyse ‘network newswork’ among global, transnational, and local news organizations, including Al Jazeera and Bernama TV, located within the same geographical locality, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. This author uses an empirically-grounded conceptual framework for exploring and understanding recent transformations that user-driven networked resources bring to professional journalists’ daily work of producing news. Discussing the implications of network newswork on the wider global journalistic sphere, the book elucidates a tiered model of networked sources and expounds upon journalism’s deepening of the digital divide in its inadvertent muting of the voices of non-networked communities that are switched off from the global news sphere and its network society.



    A fresh perspective on the analysis of globalization in the media and a useful guide for gaining access into media organizations and securing cooperation of organizational members for research, this book will be of interest to researchers in the field of Asian Media and Communication Studies, Journalism Studies, Political Communication and Sociology of Journalism.

    Introduction



    1. The Glocality of Global Media Spheres



    2. Network Newswork within Traditional Contexts of News Production



    3. A Glocal Context for Exploring Journalistic Transformations



    4. Ideological and Organizational Influences on Network Newswork



    5. Doing Network Newswork: Professional Norms and Individual Preferences



    6. Network Newswork across News Cultures



    7. Network Newswork and the Wider Media Ecology



    8. Making Meaningful Journalism



    9. Afterword

    Biography

    Amira Firdaus received her PhD from the University of Melbourne, Australia, where she was a member of the founding editorial team for Platform: Journal of Media and Communication. She is currently Senior Lecturer at the Department of Media Studies, University of Malaya, Malaysia, where she recently concluded a three year term as Managing Editor of the Malaysian Journal of Media Studies.

    'In taking a "comparative glocal" dimension this research broadens the media sociology perspective, going beyond the traditional Country A vs. Country B comparison to provide a valuable understanding of international newswork in "glocal" space.' -- Stephen D. Reese, University of Texas, USA.

    'A fascinating analysis of ‘network newswork’, a pioneering concept employed to review the ‘hierarchy of influences’ on journalists in domestic and transnational news bureaus as they decipher how to filter, integrate and present unverifiable, informal and personal information as accurate news. An incisive account of the making and presentation of news in an era where mainstream networks cannot choose to ignore multiple sources of information offered through social media.' -- Edmund Terence Gomez, University of Malaya, Malaysia.